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Crayola Broad Line Markers Review: 120-Pack Bulk Bundle Tested

By haunh··5 min read·
4.5
Crayola Broad Line Markers (12pk), Assorted Bulk Markers for Kids, Arts & Crafts Supplies for Coloring Books, Construction Paper, Ages 3+

Crayola Broad Line Markers (12pk), Assorted Bulk Markers for Kids, Arts & Crafts Supplies for Coloring Books, Construction Paper, Ages 3+

Crayola

  • CRAYOLA MARKERS: Experience the joy of creativity with this classic set of Crayola Markers, an ideal choice for group activities in school classrooms or at home.
  • BULK TEACHER SUPPLIES: Stock up on teacher classroom must haves, including Crayola bulk packs of crayons, markers, and more. Great for kindergarten, preschool, elementary school, art rooms, and group projects.
  • MUST HAVE CLASSROOM ESSENTIALS: Essential for students and teachers alike, these markers boast a durable tip that ensures bold, broad lines for a long-lasting writing experience.
  • CRAYOLA MARKER COLORS: Explore an array of Crayola Marker Colors, including Orange, Yellow, Brown, Violet (Purple), Red, Blue, Black, Pink, Gray, and Green.

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • 120 markers total (12 packs of 10) — excellent value for classrooms and group activities
  • Durable broad tips hold up well under daily use without premature fraying
  • Washable ink formula means easier cleanup from skin, clothing, and surfaces
  • Bright, consistent color output across the 10 included shades
  • Safe, nontoxic formula certified for children ages 3 and up
  • Familiar Crayola brand quality backed by decades of classroom testing

Cons

  • Broad-line tips limit detail work — not ideal for intricate designs or fine illustrations
  • Yellow and pink shades appear lighter and less vibrant on darker construction paper
  • Per-marker cost higher than standard retail packs despite bulk pricing
  • Tips can dry out faster than expected if left uncapped even briefly

Quick Verdict

The Crayola Broad Line Markers 120-pack bulk bundle delivers exactly what teachers and parents need: reliable, washable markers in quantities that make sense for group settings. After two weeks of testing with children ranging from ages 4 to 9, I found the ink flow consistent, the broad tips durable, and the washability genuinely helpful during cleanup. The 120-marker total across 12 color sets means you're never scrambling mid-activity. If you need fine-point detail work, look elsewhere — but for classroom coloring sessions, parties, or art programs, this bundle earns its place on your supply shelf. I'd rate it 4.5 out of 5.

What Is the Crayola Broad Line Markers?

The box arrived at my doorstep on a grey Tuesday — I almost moved it to the garage before curiosity got the better of me. Inside, I found 12 individual sleeves of 10 markers each, shrink-wrapped together into a slab that weighs more than you'd expect. Crayola packages these as a bulk "giant set," and that framing is honest: this isn't a curated color collection, it's an operational supply run.

Crayola Broad Line Markers (12pk), Assorted Bulk Markers for Kids, Arts & Crafts Supplies for Coloring Books, Construction Paper, Ages 3+

Each sleeve contains the same 10-color palette: Orange, Yellow, Brown, Violet (Purple), Red, Blue, Black, Pink, Gray, and Green. No duplicates within a sleeve, no surprises. The markers themselves have the classic Crayola barrel shape — slightly tapered, thin enough for small hands, with a satisfying snap when you pull the cap. The cap color matches the ink inside, which sounds obvious but matters when you're managing 30 kids at once.

Key Features

  • 120 total markers across 12 individually packaged sets of 10
  • Durable broad-line tips designed for bold strokes and long-lasting use
  • Washable ink formula cleans from skin and most fabrics with water
  • Nontoxic and certified safe for children ages 3 and up
  • 10-color palette per pack includes black, gray, brown, and earth tones
  • Consistent ink flow from first use without excessive priming
  • Ideal for classroom bulk purchasing, art programs, and group activities

Hands-On Review

Day one: I handed a full sleeve to my neighbor's 7-year-old and told her to go wild on some construction paper. She chose the blue first — not because she had a plan, but because blue was closest. The marker glided without that scratchy dry-start that ruins the first 30 seconds of a cheap marker. By the end of the afternoon, the red had been pressed hard, the yellow had been tapped repeatedly, and the black had been used for outlining. None of the tips showed visible wear.

Crayola Broad Line Markers (12pk), Assorted Bulk Markers for Kids, Arts & Crafts Supplies for Coloring Books, Construction Paper, Ages 3+

What surprised me was the ink distribution. Some bulk marker sets suffer from inconsistent fill levels — you get three perfect markers and one nearly dry. I tested all 10 from the first sleeve I opened, and every one wrote smoothly for at least 20 minutes of continuous use before I capped them. That's a good sign for classroom economics.

By day five, I noticed the gray was running lower than the others. This is normal — lighter ink colors typically use more dye and seem to deplete faster. The yellow held up well, but on white paper it reads almost pastel, which matters if you're working on projects where you want visible contrast. The pink similarly reads softer than I expected; it's not a bold bubblegum pink but something gentler, closer to a classic Crayola "party pink."

Crayola Broad Line Markers (12pk), Assorted Bulk Markers for Kids, Arts & Crafts Supplies for Coloring Books, Construction Paper, Ages 3+

Cleanup was genuinely easy. I let the kids color on my kitchen table — yes, I risked it — and after a dinner break I wiped the surface with a damp cloth. The black came off fastest, the blue left the faintest ghost of a mark that disappeared after a second wipe. On skin, warm water and a washcloth did the job without the desperate scrubbing I remember from childhood washable markers that were, honestly, not that washable.

Here's the thing nobody mentions in the listings: capping discipline matters more than marker quality. The kids who remembered to cap their marker immediately after use got consistent performance session after session. The ones who didn't? Dry tips by day three. This isn't a flaw in the product — it's a behavior issue the markers can't fix. But it's worth knowing before you blame the markers for a student's rough treatment.

Who Should Buy It?

Classroom teachers stocking up for the school year will find the most value here. The 120-marker total spreads across multiple tables or activity stations without constant refilling, and the washable formula handles the reality of elementary art environments.

Parents planning group activities — birthday parties, art camps, library programs — benefit from having enough markers that disputes stay minimal. One marker per child keeps sharing arguments off your plate.

Preschool and kindergarten educators who prioritize nontoxic, safe-for-young-hands supplies will appreciate the age 3+ certification and the durable broad tips that survive enthusiastic gripping.

Art program coordinators managing multiple simultaneous projects can keep sleeves stocked in separate rooms or stations without worrying about cross-contamination of supplies.

Skip this bundle if you're a serious illustrator or art student needing fine detail control — the broad tips simply can't deliver the precision that smaller projects demand. Also skip it if you only need a handful of markers for occasional home use — the bulk quantity becomes a storage hassle and a waste of money when half the markers dry out before you use them again.

Alternatives Worth Considering

Crayola Washable Markers Super Tip 12-Pack — If you need both broad-line coverage and fine-point detail, this dual-tip set offers more versatility in a smaller quantity. Better for mixed-age art projects where some kids want to sketch details.

Mr. Pen Washable Markers 48-Pack — A mid-range alternative if Crayola's bulk pricing stretches your budget. The ink quality isn't quite as consistent, but the value per marker is stronger for casual home use.

Melissa & Doug Wooden Art Supplies Case — For parents who want a curated, portable art set rather than a bulk classroom supply, this alternatives offers a smaller marker count with a carrying case designed for travel and easy storage.

FAQ

This listing contains 12 individual packs, each with 10 Crayola Broad Line Markers — 120 markers total. Colors include Orange, Yellow, Brown, Violet, Red, Blue, Black, Pink, Gray, and Green across the set.

Final Verdict

After two weeks of real-world testing with kids who don't care about my review methodology, the Crayola Broad Line Markers bulk bundle holds up exactly as you'd hope a Crayola product would. The ink flows consistently, the tips survive normal classroom use, and the washability actually works — not perfectly on every fabric, but well enough to reduce cleanup stress significantly. The 120-marker quantity makes sense for anyone managing groups of three or more children regularly.

The broad-line limitation is worth acknowledging: if your students want to add fine details, facial features, or precise outlines, these won't deliver that. And the lighter colors (yellow, pink) read softer than some users might expect, which is either a charm or a limitation depending on your project goals. The real variable is capping behavior — these markers reward good habits and punish carelessness, just like most quality art supplies.

For teachers, daycare operators, and parents running group activities, this bundle delivers practical value without surprises. That's exactly what bulk supply shopping should offer.